US Mint circulating coin production figures plunged in November 2010, falling to their worst level since April according to the latest data published by the agency.

In other revelations, the US Mint provided mintages for the Mount Hood National Park Quarter and the Abraham Lincoln Presidential dollar.

If weakened coin demand is an indicator of a lethargic economy, which it has been in the past, Americans can look forward to continued economic pain if the latest US Mint trends continue.

Previous October levels had snapped a string of three straight monthly declines that followed a peaking June when nearly 920 million coins were minted. But November 2010 coin production dived by almost 200 million from October, making it the fifth worst month this year with just over 531 million coins manufactured.

2010 Coin Production Monthly Totals

January

February

March

April

May

218.41 M

194.40 M

384.42 M

451.96 M

657.22 M

June

July

August

September

October

November

918.94 M

772.08 M

743.78 M

690.02 M

730.22 M

531.46 M

6,292,910,000 coins were minted between January and November. Doubling last year’s 3.5 billion run, which was the lowest in decades, is now in jeopardy. Still, the annual pace is at least tilting toward higher numbers that were last seen in 2008.

For the first time since February, the US Mint reported making only three types of circulating coins during a month. Totals were lifted for Lincoln cents, Jefferson nickels and Roosevelt dimes.

November 2010 US Mint Coin Production

Denver

Philadelphia

Total

Lincoln Cents

177,200,000

166,800,000

344,000,000

Jefferson Nickels

34,320,000

38,640,000

72,960,000

Roosevelt Dimes

53,000,000

61,500,000

114,500,000

2010 Quarters

0

0

0

Kennedy Half Dollars

0

0

0

Native American $1s

0

0

0

Presidential Dollars

0

0

0

Total

264,520,000

266,940,000

531,460,000

The US Mint in Philadelphia was busier than Denver overall and for the first time in three months. But not by much. The shifts look to be an ongoing plan by the Mint to have relatively equal mintage splits between facilities by year’s end.

2010 Coin Production by Design (YTD)

Denver

Philadelphia

2010 Total

Lincoln Cents

1,982,800,000

1,970,430,000

3,953,230,000

Jefferson Nickels

226,560,000

260,640,000

487,200,000

Roosevelt Dimes

548,500,000

557,000,000

1,105,500,000

Hot Springs National Park Quarters

34,000,000

35,600,000

69,600,000

Yellowstone National Park Quarters

34,800,000

33,600,000

68,400,000

Yosemite National Park Quarters

34,800,000

35,200,000

70,000,000

Grand Canyon National Park

35,400,000

34,800,000

70,200,000

Mount Hood Park Quarters

34,400,000

34,400,000

68,800,000

Kennedy Half Dollars

1,700,000

1,800,000

3,500,000

Native American $1

42,980,000

32,060,000

75,040,000

Fillmore Presidential $1

36,960,000

37,520,000

74,480,000

Pierce Presidential $1

38,360,000

38,220,000

76,580,000

Buchanan Presidential $1

36,540,000

36,820,000

73,360,000

Lincoln Presidential $1

48,020,000

49,000,000

97,020,000

What was reported as preliminary mintages in October for Mount Hood quarters and Lincoln Presidential dollars turned out to be the final figures published in November — although there is a small chance the Mount Hood quarters could rise in December with bulk quarters purchases.

The Lincoln Presidential dollars launched into circulation on November 18. The US Mint produced 97.02 million in total. Split between Denver and Philadelphia, mintages came to 48.02 million for 2010-D Lincoln dollars and 49.0 million for 2010-P Lincoln dollars. Their mintages are the highest since the 2009-D Harrison dollar, which was the inaugural release last year.

Mount Hood quarters were released into circulation on November 15. They are the fifth issue in the debuting America the Beautiful Quarters® Program. The US Mint reports even coin production levels of 34.4 million between both Denver and Philadelphia, for a total of 68.8 million. The 2010-D Mount Hood quarter comes in second for least produced in Denver this year. The 2010-P Mount Hood quarter also has the second lowest mintage of any Philadelphia struck 2010 quarter.

RE: 2010 Union Cents…if I did the math correctly, and moved the decimal point inwards two places…it looks like face value alone is over $395 MILLION DOLLARS…just in CENTS !!!!

2010 US Census projects 308 million people living in USA..figure how many cents are already floating in circulation, it’s mind boggling. Why did the Mint feel it so important to produce this many new cents with the current economic issues all tax payers are facing?? You are right about the metal issue, but pretty soon inflation will force us to round up to the nearest dollar, making fractional coinage a thing of the past, and will only produce for collectors. Then all of the backed up dollar coins will be the new “CENT” weighing down our pockets, IF we’re lucky enough to have a few to jingle. I’m starting to believe the monetary meltdown conspiracy rumors more each day.